Read The Best American Poetry 2015 Online
Authors: David Lehman
Let's go to the shooting range. I have no business expertise,
but I'd love a guy who is good with rope.
from
The Journal
When I see an escalator I have to kiss
everyone on it, don't you? If you like these
pastriesâour lawyer calls them perfidy rollsâ
there are more on his helicopter.
He's Serbian or something,
whole family wiped out
by his other family. But he's fine now.
Drop a kiss on the cultural floor,
three-second rule applies. I don't even know
who I'm kissing anymore, do you?
Sneak away to where the world snaps in half
and come back with sanctions, come back
with sauces, come back with Haribo,
come back with
Inferno
flashcards,
come back with the glottal nonstop.
Dear Ciacco, your flowers were delicious but barely
a lunch so we dug a new grave for the stems.
“Finish us up,” they sang, “or finish us off.”
Lie down in sewage to stay down; sit up
only for people-will-see-me-and-die-level fame,
smiling like your teeth are on fire.
Oh darling you know what they say:
why have one factory
when you can have five. Our lawyer always
reminds us, “Little hands, long hours.” Indeed!
If I could eat my voice I would, but I'm off
to seize the world, the inside of its machine.
This is the way Celan ends, not with a bang
but a river. Woolf, too; she goes out
the same goddamn wayâ
I mean, wind any creature tight
enough and it does what it has to do.
from
Lemon Hound
Abracadabra: The anus. The star at the base of the human
balloon. Close it tight as the sun, then let it unfurl:
Crepe paper, the spiraling heart of the pipecleaner flower.
Do you know what to do? Pry open that shopworn diary.
Easy. Use your fingertips, mirrors. See what you're hiding
from yourself. Use spoons to reflect: Your ass, backwards,
goes raveling outward like an expanding universe.
Have you considered
muscerdae
, the soft and smooth
innumerable droppings of mice?
Guano
, the bats' own
jellicate wallpaper? Read those fewtrils for alphabets and become
kahuna. Revere their secret dictations until,
like all things, the secrets reorder the order of your language.
Make those soft, inward labyrinths your own. Know them
not for their oubliettes alone, but for what they release:
Omina. Fortuna. The ways in which you see and might become.
Parousia. That moment in which the body feels least heavy, most
quiet, uncalmably calm. Consider: Between
scatology
and
eschatology
remains only “he.” Not “the man” or “man” or “men” but Old English,
see? Us all, perhaps, though this is not the point. The point is
this: We can take in language from either end and make language
understoodâagain, from either end. Embrace your exits, where bloom
virginities of every orifice. Where bloom oracles: We are all full of shit.
We could choose to make this space in us so small no digit, no wind, no
x
could ever pass through. Or we could open a world any finger or tongue
(yours?) could enter into and speak. We could make a primer. Have you considered:
Zeroâthe shape that comes to mindâin its most common, most practical functions
makes everything the same as or equal to itself.
from
Ninth Letter
Kintsugi
is the Japanese art of mending precious pottery with gold.
What's between us
seems flexible as the webbing
between forefinger and thumb.
Seems flexible but isn't;
what's between us
is made of clay
like any cup on the shelf.
It shatters easily. Repair
becomes the task.
We glue the wounded edges
with tentative fingers.
Scar tissue is visible history
and the cup is precious to us
because
we saved it.
In the art of
kintsugi
a potter repairing a broken cup
would sprinkle the resin
with powdered gold.
Sometimes the joins
are so exquisite
they say the potter
may have broken the cup
just so he could mend it.
from
The Southern Review
and
Poetry Daily
House is not a metaphor. House has nothing
to do with beak or wing. House is not two
hands held angled towards each other. House is
not its roof or the pine straw on its roof. At night,
its windows and doors look nothing like a face.
Its stairs are not vertebrae. Its walls may be
white. They are not pale skin. House does not
appreciate your pun on its panes as pains.
House does not appreciate because house
does not have feelings. House has no aesthetic
program. House does what it does, which is
not doing. House does not sit on its foundations.
House exists in its foundations, and when the wind
pushes itself to full gale, house is never the one crying.
from
Conduit
I washed your father's pants in the kitchen sink.
That should have been enough to tell you.
I am still convinced there is no difference
between kneeling and falling if you don't get up.
The head goes down in defeat, but lower in prayer,
and your sister tells me each visit that she has learned
of a new use for her hands.
I've seen this from you both: cartwheels through the field
at dawn, toes popping above the corn stalks like fleas
over the heads of lepers. Your scarecrow reminds me
of Jesus, his guilt confused for fear.
The sun doesn't know; the fog lifts
everything in praise.
from
The Volta
From two pieces of string and oil-fattened feathers he made a father.
She made a mother from loss buttons and ocean debris.
Lacking a grave, they embottled themselves
in a favorite liqueur, the pyx and plethora of cloudsâ
with the heart striped and clear-cut, they rekindled the stars,
created a glossary of seeds.
Down the fire ladder, rung after fiery rung, they gather, salvage,
fiddle about, curse and root, laugh themselves silly,
en masse assemble a makeshift holy city. In the holy city,
makeshift, they assemble en masse, silly themselves,
laugh and root, curse the fiddle, gather salvage rung
after fiery rung as they ladder their fire down.
A glossary seeded creates stars, strips clear the diamond-cut heart.
They sold clouds, the plethora and pyx of liqueur. Favored themselves
embottled in grave lack, ocean debris, and loss buttons,
where Mother made a father who made feathers
from fattened oil and string pieces for two.
from
The New Yorker